A group of about 150 migrants carrying white flags that read, "La paz
y Dios," or "Peace and God are With Us," separated from the larger
caravan near Southern California and inched within 500 feet of the U.S.,
a report Thursday said.
The migrants said they are carrying the
white flags to show that they are peaceful, and will attempt to present
themselves as asylum seekers near Baja, Calif., The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.
President Trump on Thursday threatened to close the border
with Mexico if his administration determines that Mexico has lost
control of the situation. The Union-Tribune reported that Mexican
federal police held a barrier near a pedestrian crossing and urged the
migrants to apply for jobs in Tijuana. Police claimed there are
thousands of jobs in the city. Federal police were dressed in riot gear
and prevented the caravan from getting closer to the U.S.
Carlos
Lopez, a Honduran who was leading the small group, told the paper that
the conditions in Mexico are horrible. He said there are sick children
and women and children are forced to remain outside in the
elements. Those already in the city have camped out in tents, slept on
dirt fields or under bleachers or are staying in overcrowded shelters
throughout the city as they wait to figure out their next steps.
"The whole world is watching what is happening here," he said.
The
report said the larger group contains about 6,219 Central Americans.
The federal government estimates the number of migrants could grow to
10,000 in the coming weeks, or months. President Trump warned that the
caravan is a national security threat and it will not enter the U.S.
On
Monday, a judge barred the president from enforcing a ban on asylum for
those who cross the U.S. border illegally – a decision the
administration said would cause “countless illegal aliens to pour into
our country."
The report said that the migrants who traveled for over a month can now see a bridge that separates them from the U.S.
Speaking
to reporters while in Florida for the holiday, Trump threatened to
close the U.S. border with Mexico for an undisclosed period of time if
his administration determines that its southern ally has lost "control"
on its side.
Trump also said he has given the thousands of
active-duty troops he sent to the border before the Nov. 6 midterm
elections the "OK" to use lethal force against migrants "if they have
to." And he said Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, whom he
has faulted for not being tough enough on immigration, is "in there
trying."
Travelers check in for flights at John F. Kennedy International Airport,
Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2018, in New York. The airline industry trade group
Airlines for America expects that Wednesday will be the second busiest
day of the holiday period behind only Sunday, when many travelers will
be returning home after Thanksgiving. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 8:35 AM PT — Wed. Nov. 21, 2018
Airlines and highways are now feeling the holiday travel spirit as Americans gear up to celebrate Thanksgiving.
Officials said the day before Thanksgiving will be the second busiest
day to fly, behind the following Sunday, with an estimated 2.93 million
passengers flying.
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officials are predicting
a record number of air travelers this holiday season, with more than 25
million passengers nationwide going through security between November
16th through November 26th.
AAA expects over 54 million Americans to hit the roads and travel
50-miles or more for the holiday this year, which is a nearly
five-percent increase from 2017.
“We’re seeing this is the busiest travel since 2005, more than 54
million people traveling, 85-percent of those — or 48 and a half million
— will be driving to their destinations,” stated Robert Sinclair,
spokesman for AAA. “People have more money in their pockets, household
net worth is up, disposable is up, consumer confidence is up, and when
we have a little time built into our schedules, we take advantage of
it.”
Airlines for America said more Americans are traveling by air than ever due to historically low fares.
President
Donald Trump waves after speaking to the media before leaving the White
House in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2018. The president thanked
Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2018 for the lower oil prices. (AP
Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 11:18 a.m. PT – Wednesday Nov. 21, 2018
Pres. Trump applauds the low oil prices comparing it to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
On Twitter Wednesday the president thanked Saudi Arabia for the low
oil prices, saying a barrel went from $82 to $54 and he wants to
continue getting that price lower. He then said it’s like a big tax cut
for America and the world.
Oil prices getting lower. Great! Like a big Tax
Cut for America and the World. Enjoy! $54, was just $82. Thank you to
Saudi Arabia, but let’s go lower!
A
dual Saudi-American citizen has been detained in Saudi Arabia for over a
year after the country's crackdown on corruption and his status has
raised new criticism of President Trump's reluctance to punish the
kingdom over issues that do not directly affect American citizens.
The White House has been barraged with criticism over its stance towards Saudi Arabia in the wake of the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post writer whose death in Turkey was allegedly ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The
murder of the writer prompted outrage across the world, with some
countries such as Germany ending its arms deal with Saudi Arabia. A U.S.
official told The Associated Press that intelligence officials have
concluded that bin Salman ordered the killing.
Trump fired back
against the criticism that the U.S. isn’t doing enough, saying Khashoggi
wasn’t an American citizen and it happened on Turkish soil. “Well, it's
not our country. It's in Turkey. And it's not a citizen, as I
understand it,” he said last month. TRUMP UNSURE WHETHER SAUDI CROWN PRINCE KNEW OF KHASHOGGI MURDER: ‘MAYBE HE DID AND MAYBE HE DIDN’T!’
Walid Fitaihi, a Harvard-trained doctor, television host and
motivational speaker was arrested last year together with 17 other
people in what bin Salman touted as a crackdown on corruption.
But as he made the comments, an American doctor was
spending his days in prison as part of bin Salman’s purge of
businessmen, princes, clerics, scholars and activists in a bid to
consolidate power, the New York Times reported.
Walid
Fitaihi, a Harvard-trained doctor, television host and motivational
speaker was arrested last year together with 17 others in what bin
Salman touted as a crackdown on corruption. The detained individuals
reportedly underwent harsh treatment and abuse, with at least one person
dying due to abuse in detention.
Unlike some other detainees, who
managed to free themselves after pledging loyalty to the new Saudi
leadership or paying money, Fitaihi was transferred to prison for
incarceration despite not being formally charged with any crime.
Fitaihi
obtained his American citizenship more than a decade ago when studying
and practicing medicine in the U.S. He once was registered to vote in
U.S. elections and moved back to Saudi Arabia sometime in 2006. Upon his
return to Saudi Arabia, he founded a private hospital.
After the
September 11, 2001 terror attack in the U.S., Fitaihi was quoted by the
Denver Post condemning the attacks. “There are Muslims who died,
Christians who died, Jews who died — it’s a crime against humanity,” he
said. “It’s a test for us as a nation.”
In 2004, Fitaihi came
under fire for revelations that he made anti-Semitic comments in Arabic
newspapers, including calling Jews “perpetrators of the worst of evils”
and to have said they control “the power of the media,” according to the
Times. CIA DETERMINES KHASHOGGI’S DEATH WAS ORDERED BY SAUDI CROWN PRINCE MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN: REPORT
The
Trump administration has long sought to free imprisoned Americans
across the world, taking harsh measures against hostile countries in an
attempt to force their release.
Earlier this year, three Americans
were freed from North Korea who were accused of hostile acts against
the communist state. The President also campaigned to bring back
American college student Otto Warmbier, who suffered brain damage and
died after being held captive in North Korea for 15 months after an
ill-fated trip to the country in 2015. More recently, Trump imposed
trade sanctions on Turkey, forcing the release of Pastor Andrew Brunson.
But
it appears the Trump administration hasn’t made attempts to free
Fitaihi, except for “routinely request[ing] consular access to all
American citizens that have been detained in Saudi Arabia,” according to
the Times.
Khashoggi, the slain writer, once spoken out against about his friend’s arrest.
“What
has happened to us?” Khashoggi tweeted. “How can someone like Dr. Walid
Fitaihi be arrested and what are the justifications for it?”
“Everyone is in a state of confusion and helplessness, there is no one you can go to,” he added. “God help us.”
In
a remarkably inappropriate and blatantly political statement Wednesday,
U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts chastised President Trump for the
president’s quite accurate criticism of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals and its rogue district and appellate court judges.
The
spectacle of the ostensibly nonpolitical chief justice engaged in a
dispute with the president of the United States is insulting to the
Supreme Court and to our system of justice.
Shame on the chief
justice. What he did is unforgivable, especially after the corrosive
Senate confirmation battle over now-Supreme Court Justice Brett
Kavanaugh, who was the subject of bitter and baseless partisan attacks
and character assassination by Senate Democrats.
With everyone
looking for ways to remove the high court from the political thicket,
Roberts strode arrogantly right into it. Sad day.
Roberts
responded Wednesday to comments President Trump made to reporters a day
earlier, after a district court judge appointed by President Obama
issued an order to stop Trump’s new emergency restrictions on asylum
claims by immigrants from taking effect.
U.S. District Judge Jon
S. Tigar in San Francisco issued the nationwide injunction blocking the
president’s restrictions. The restrictions would have made it harder for
many of the thousands of Central American migrants now heading toward
the U.S. border in caravans to apply for asylum in America.
“This
was an Obama judge, and I'll tell you what, it's not going to happen
like this anymore," the president said of Tigar. "Everybody that wants
to sue the U.S. – almost – they file their case in the 9th Circuit, and
it means an automatic loss. No matter what you do, no matter how good
your case is. And the 9th Circuit is really something we have to take a
look at, because it's not fair."
“We do not have Obama judges or
Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” Roberts shot back
Wednesday, as if he were facing Trump in a presidential candidate
debate. “What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges
doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before
them."
The spectacle of the ostensibly nonpolitical
chief justice engaged in a dispute with the president of the United
States is insulting to the Supreme Court and to our system of justice.
But
President Trump’s criticism of liberal judges in the 9th Circuit who
were nominated by President Obama was accurate. These judges previously
issued an order blocking the president’s Travel Ban Executive Order that
was designed to protect our country from terrorists crossing our
borders. As President Trump correctly noted, the Supreme Court later
overturned the ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Roberts’ comments seemed particularly strange because he had never injected himself into a political debate before.
In
fact, Roberts sat quietly through President Obama’s 2010 State of the
Union Address when Obama sharply attacked Supreme Court justices sitting
in the audience for their ruling in the Citizens United case, which
allowed unlimited political campaign contributions by unions and
corporations.
President Obama falsely claimed in this speech that
the Citizens United ruling allowed massive political contributions by
foreign corporations. It did no such thing.
As the justices sat in
the House chamber listening to his speech, President Obama embarrassed
the court directly and fiercely. Not a peep from Roberts. Only Justice
Samuel Alito quietly mouthed to himself “no, no” as Obama railed against
foreign campaign contributions.
Roberts has said nothing about Obama’s remarks in the eight years since.
So why did Roberts attack President Trump on Wednesday? Well, Trump is not a Democrat.
Many
believe that Roberts caved to political criticism by President Obama
and his Democratic cohorts in a case where Roberts was the decisive vote
in a ruling that found ObamaCare was constitutional – a historic
victory for Democrats.
Roberts clearly accepted the claim by
Democrats in that case that the Supreme Court could not overturn
ObamaCare or the high court would forever harm the republic and subvert
the legislative process and the will of the people.
It is widely
believed that Roberts changed his vote at the last minute to stop the
Supreme Court from overturning ObamaCare in that landmark case because
of pressure from outside forces directed against him.
Indeed, the
wording of various dissents in the ObamaCare case – especially Justice
Antonin Scalia’s – made it clear that Roberts’ decision to find that
ObamaCare was constitutional was political and nothing more – not a
decision based on the Constitution or on the law.
The ObamaCare
ruling was a legacy opinion for Roberts because he couldn’t take another
wave of criticism like what he received from the liberal media, Obama
and the Democrats after his ruling in the Citizens United case. Roberts
caved in an obvious nod to the attacks on him. It was palpable and most
unfortunate.
Roberts’ ObamaCare opinion had a quality of “oh by
the way” and artificiality to it that was apparent to Supreme Court
observers.
So Roberts’ pro-Democratic bias that we saw Wednesday
is nothing new. It is, in fact, a repetition and a return to normal for
him.
The chief justice was institutionally the wrong person to
make his point in criticizing President Trump. If the point was to be
made at all, it should have been made by the usual suspects: the
American Bar Association, any well-known and respected lawyer, or a
prominent media commentator or newspaper editorial page.
The
candidates for attacking President Trump are numerous and inoffensive.
Perhaps Roberts could have chosen his favorite Democrat on the House
Judiciary Committee. At any rate, he chose none of these options. One
wonders why.
Why would Roberts insert himself, at this time, in
this situation, to attack President Trump? He is a very smart man. This
was not an accident or a coincidence.
Megyn Kelly is close to finalizing a $30 million exit from NBC, sources confirm to Page Six.
The
embattled anchor, who celebrated her 48th birthday Sunday, was dumped
from her 9 a.m. slot on “Today” last month after questioning why it was
racist to wear blackface for Halloween.
And as she prepares to sign her exit deal, the mom of three is already planning her return to TV, Page Six has learned.
Sources
say NBC owner Comcast will pay Kelly around $30 million. She signed a
$69 million deal when she joined the network after leaving Fox News in
2017.
A source familiar with the negotiations said nothing will
happen until next week at the earliest, admitting: “It’s taking slightly
longer than expected, the paperwork is going back and forth.”
Another
confirmed: “Everyone wants this to be over — both Megyn and NBC — and
Comcast has the money to pay off Megyn. We thought this would be a done
deal a few weeks ago.”
One senior TV source added: “NBC decided
rather than fight and face a lawsuit from her, they — and more
importantly, Comcast with all its money — decided to draw a line under
the entire debacle and pay Megyn the full amount owed in her contract to
go away.
“But this is far from the end of her TV career — in the
Trump era, there are few broadcasters like her. Megyn would likely take a
short break from TV and return to cable news ahead of the 2020
election.”
When Kelly — whose 9 a.m. hour had failed to win over
viewers — made her comments, the backlash was immediate, with “Today”
mainstay Al Roker lashing out at his colleague on air.
He said: “The fact is, while she apologized to the staff, she owes a bigger apology to folks of color around the country.
“This
is a history going back to the 1830s — minstrel shows to demean and
denigrate a race wasn’t right. I’m old enough to know, have lived
through ‘Amos ‘n’ Andy,’ where you had white people in blackface playing
two black characters, just magnifying the worst stereotypes about black
people — and that’s what the problem is. That’s what the issue is.”
Reps for Kelly and NBC declined to comment.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez took aim at Sarah Palin on Tuesday,
after Palin appeared to mock the newly elected U.S. representative from
New York on Twitter.
(AP/Getty Images)
Newly elected Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin are trading barbs on Twitter.
“Now
that’s *TWO* fallen GOP Vice Pres candidates going after a freshman
Congresswoman that’s not even sworn in yet,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted.
“Isn’t it a little early to be bringing out the big guns? Especially
when they look like the FWD:RE:FWD:WATCH THIS grandpa emails from the
‘08 election they lost.”
The spat began after Palin, running mate to Republican presidential candidate John McCain in 2008, tweeted on Monday: “YIKES: Ocasio-Cortez Fumbles Basic Civics TWICE In 1 Statement.”
Palin’s
tweet came alongside an article from governorpalin.org, which included a
screenshot of a Twitter post from Ryan Saavedra, a reporter at The
Daily Wire. The reporter on Sunday evening shared a video of
Ocasio-Cortez making a mistake when talking about the government.
“If
we work our butts off to make sure that we take back all three chambers
of Congress — uh, rather, all three chambers of government: the
presidency, the Senate, and the House in 2020, we can’t start working in
2020,”’ Ocasio-Cortez is heard saying on the video.
Ocasio-Cortez fired back, turning the conversation to health care.
“Maybe
instead of Republicans drooling over every minute of footage of me in
slow-mo, waiting to chop up word slips that I correct in real-tomd
(sic), they actually step up enough to make the argument they want to
make: that they don’t believe people deserve a right to healthcare,” she
tweeted. OCASIO-CORTEZ SAYS PEOPLE KEEP MISTAKING HER FOR A CAPITOL HILL INTERN
She later tweeted a correction of the spelling of “real-time.”
In a follow-up to her retort aimed at Palin, Ocasio-Cortez revealed on Twitter
Tuesday that the other vice presidential candidate she had been
referring to was “Lieberman,” seemingly referring to 2000 Democratic
vice-presidential candidate Joe Lieberman.
She later tweeted:
“For those who need their jokes explained to them: surprise! This tweet
thread is humorous! The emoji in the original tweet signals that humor
is indicated in the statement. :) (You know, because Lieberman killed
the public option for healthcare and endorses Republicans).”
Ocasio-Cortez,
the 29-year-old Democratic socialist from New York, defeated her
Republican challenger earlier this month in the midterm elections,
becoming the youngest female elected to Congress.
Attorney Michael Avenatti, right, poses with Mareli Miniutti for a photo at a party in New York.
(AP)
The actress who was
granted a temporary restraining order against attorney Michael Avenatti
claimed that he "dragged" her on the floor and put her into a public
hallway dressed only in a T-shirt and underwear, a report said, citing
court documents.
In a sworn declaration, Mareli Miniutti, 24, said
she and Avenatti, 47, dated from October 2017 to Nov. 13, the night
Avenatti allegedly hit her in the face with pillows and followed her
into a guest bedroom where she went to sleep alone, the New York Times reported.
Miniutti said they had an argument about money in his Los Angeles apartment.
“He
dragged me on the floor of the apartment towards and out of the door
into the public hallway,” she wrote in the declaration. “I was wearing
only my underwear and a T-shirt at the time, and suffered scratches to
the bare skin on my side and leg.”
Avenatti pulled Miniutti back
into the apartment and blocked the door, the declaration reportedly
said. She eventually left and said she spoke with building security. A
friend picked her up and she called the police, the report said. The
court filing includes photos that appears to show bruising and
scratches, the paper reported.
Miniutti did not immediately respond to a Fox News request for comment.
Avenatti was arrested on suspicion of domestic violence the next day and a judge granted Miniutti’s request for a temporary restraining order this week.
Avenatti
denied the claims in a series of tweets Monday. He said he has never
abused a woman and has called for the release of video footage from the
building’s security cameras.
“I am a target,” he said. “And I will be exonerated.”
In
a separate episode, Miniutti also claimed Avenatti had been drinking
and pushed her out of a different apartment into a hallway, threw shoes
at her and struck her in the leg.
She reportedly said the
high-profile lawyer “has a history of being very verbally abusive and
financially controlling towards me,” and that he “made promises to ‘take
care of me’ financially and sometimes fails to follow through.”
A
fierce critic of President Donald Trump, Avenatti has advocated on
behalf of women’s rights and represented adult-film star Stormy Daniels,
in a legal dispute against Trump.
“I continue to be afraid of” Avenatti, she wrote, according to the paper, "and do not want him to contact me."